Trump going all Hank Shrader about Ukraine's minerals doesn't really combine well with his current moodswing. He says he wants Ukraine to pay for help....but he also says the US will abandon them rather than give any help.![]()
Trump demands $500B in rare earths from Ukraine for continued support
“We have to get something. We can’t continue to pay this money,” U.S. president says.www.politico.eu
![]()
'Let's do a deal' — Zelensky tells Reuters he's open to Trump's mineral partnership
President Volodymyr Zelensky stressed in an interview with Reuters on Feb. 7 that Ukraine was not offering to "give away" its resources but seeking a mutually beneficial partnership.kyivindependent.com
"Nice country you've got there. Be a shame if something should happen to it."![]()
Trump demands $500B in rare earths from Ukraine for continued support
“We have to get something. We can’t continue to pay this money,” U.S. president says.www.politico.eu
![]()
'Let's do a deal' — Zelensky tells Reuters he's open to Trump's mineral partnership
President Volodymyr Zelensky stressed in an interview with Reuters on Feb. 7 that Ukraine was not offering to "give away" its resources but seeking a mutually beneficial partnership.kyivindependent.com
Trump always wants to get stuff and have other people or countries pay for it.Trump going all Hank Shrader about Ukraine's minerals doesn't really combine well with his current moodswing. He says he wants Ukraine to pay for help....but he also says the US will abandon them rather than give any help.
Without wanting to derail the thread, christ there's a lot of that going around.European leadership has been awful, and Europe is kind of getting what it deserves.
While I broadly agree, I might argue that the EU doesn't need an EU military, but European nations should get themselves in a decent treaty system with someone. If, say, a third of the EU doesn't want to play, the others can form their own super special club with a different membership list (without leaving the EU), and maybe ask countries like Canada if they want to play as well.Europe needs to bulk up its military, and I mean a lot. By which I mean not equalling Russia / USA's, just that defence spending (%GDP) in many EU countries is so incredibly low, even if they doubled spending it would still be below average. It needs to make a lot more of its own hardware: if it can't trust the USA, it's got to stop buying American. It needs arms and munitions manufacture capable of independent action. And not just military, it needs whole technologies where it can stand on its It needs a proper, EU military capable of independent and effective action. I know this is a HUGE political issue, as this is a massive and direct erosion of national sovereignty. But a Europe where big decisions are perpetually held hostage by any prick who'll sacrifice the greater interest to win their next election, or actively sold out by traitors like Orban, is a Europe guaranteed to go into the future as a failure. A retirement home; affluent, bickering old fuddy-duddies fading away into obsolescence and insignificance.
It could increase its spending by four times and still probably fail to get the most important thing it needs. People. All the tanks, ships, and aircraft are worthless without people to operate them.Europe needs to bulk up its military, and I mean a lot. By which I mean not equalling Russia / USA's, just that defence spending (%GDP) in many EU countries is so incredibly low, even if they doubled spending it would still be below average.
First, nearly all European countries in NATO have reached the 2% spending. That is not "incredibly low", considering that the oversized US spending amounts to only 3.5% as well.Europe needs to bulk up its military, and I mean a lot. By which I mean not equalling Russia / USA's, just that defence spending (%GDP) in many EU countries is so incredibly low, even if they doubled spending it would still be below average.
I think that's less of a problem than you do.It could increase its spending by four times and still probably fail to get the most important thing it needs. People. All the tanks, ships, and aircraft are worthless without people to operate them.
Oh yes, you're right. Several of them finally got to 2%... last year.First, nearly all European countries in NATO have reached the 2% spending. That is not "incredibly low", considering that the oversized US spending amounts to only 3.5% as well.
It does need a stronger military. I would agree that "stronger" is not necessarily the same as "bigger", but at the end of the day, if it cannot manage substantial deployments to protect its interests, its military is not up to scratch. For instance, when France and the UK decided to bomb Libya ~10 years ago, they ran out of bombs so quickly they had to ask the USA to get involved.Second, no, Europe does not actually need a stronger army. Nukes aside, the EU armies can take out very one in the vacinity, including Russia. - that is if they were actually acting together.
What is instead needed is more cooperation and more common EU wide foreign policy and common security policy. And more structures that don't involve the US, so that Europe could act alone. But certainly not bigger armies.
You honestly think the US is gonna turn into an enemy? Turning into a not-an-ally, fine, I can see that happening, but an actual enemy?There might still be time for Europe to prepare itself from the threat of having both the USA to the west, and Russia to the east as enemies.
Perhaps not an enemy in the sense they'll invade. But Trump, Vance and the oligarchs that joined them all wear their hatred of Europe on their sleeve, with Zuckerburg even saying the oligarchs and Trump should join hands to force Europe into surrendering its consumer protections, and Vance expressing similar discomfort about oligarchs not being above the state in Europe.You honestly think the US is gonna turn into an enemy? Turning into a not-an-ally, fine, I can see that happening, but an actual enemy?
Militarily ? Probably not.You honestly think the US is gonna turn into an enemy? Turning into a not-an-ally, fine, I can see that happening, but an actual enemy?
they could have just notFor instance, when France and the UK decided to bomb Libya ~10 years ago, they ran out of bombs so quickly they had to ask the USA to get involved.